Break up the project into milestones (for example getting a shell application online with a build process, getting the membership and user management piece in place, etc). As you being each milestone, break it up into tasks and then break the tasks down into single sentence actions. Keep a checklist (I find checkvist to be pretty handy) so you can see your progress. If any one thing seems like an ass-ache that you'd rather not deal with or aren't quite clear on, try and break it down into smaller pieces so you can chip away at it while working on other things. Along these lines, I find it useful to always keep a handful of non-critical tasks in reserve, just in case I have a day when I can't focus / exhausted / whatever.
I've also found it very useful to commit to a minimal amount of time each day and keep a log (see Seinfeld's "chain" method). If you can do more than your commitment, great! But if not, you'll still feel good about moving forward.
Also, find a way to reward yourself for reaching major milestones. New video game/clothes/hula-hoop or whatever it is kids these days are into? Deferred gratification always feels better.
Good luck!
OK, so it looks like you are not too far off. I just added the following and was able to create a new list.
$CreateBody = @{
'name' = "MyChecklist"
'public' = 0
} | convertto-json
$WRCreate = @{
URI = "https://checkvist.com/checklists.json"
Body = $CreateBody
method = 'POST'
contenttype = "application/json"
Websession = $test
}
$WR4 = Invoke-Webrequest @WRCreate PS C:\Windows\system32> $wr4.Content | convertfrom-json
id : 596960 name : MyChecklist options : 3 public : True updated_at : 2017/01/26 20:17:57 +0000 markdown? : True archived : False read_only : True user_count : 1 user_updated_at : percent_completed : 0 task_count : 0 task_completed : 0 tags : tags_as_text :
Couple things to take note of. Parameters: checklist[name] - checklist name checklist[public] - 0|1 (optional) The Actual parameter names are: name public
So your body would be a hashtable with name and public, values could be 'mylist' and the public would be 0 for false and 1 for true(I think)
You then have to convert the body to json, as that is what the API expects. It could be XML, but I would go with json as it is easier to convert to and from in Powershell.
Let me know if you need another example.
Hi, i'm a co-founder of Checkvist, if you have any questions/suggestions - please ask. By the way, we've added bulk operations/multiple selection support just yesterday, haven't announced it yet.
Regarding the original question - Checkvist provides search/tags/Markdown support + CSS customization of the outline.
Possibly, the primary difference of Checkvist from other tools is its focus on effective work from the keyboard.
Global search in Checkvist allows showing tagged items across your lists without parents.
But it won't work on the mobile version of Checkvist. On mobile version of Checkvist you can only use focus/hoist to hide parents.
You're describing an outliner. There are lots of them.
Like https://checkvist.com/ and this one I like: https://gingkoapp.com/
And if you need tons of details, Scrivener.
EDIT: I forgot to mention that any traditional mindmap is functionally identical to an outliner - many can even support outline views! So https://www.mindmup.com/ etc
OK, makes sense.
FYI: outliners are great for quickly capturing and laying out info including while listening to a lecture. I use Checkvist. Moo.do and Workflowy are two others.
Not sure what exactly you are trying to do, but I had luck with the following requests.
$username = "" $remote_key = "12345"
$Auth = @{ username = $username remote_key = $remote_key } $WR = Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "https://checkvist.com/auth/login.json" -Method Get -ContentType "application/json" -Body $Auth -SessionVariable 'test' $wr2 = Invoke-WebRequest "https://checkvist.com/auth/curr_user.json" -Method Get -ContentType "application/json" -WebSession $test $wr3 = Invoke-WebRequest "https://checkvist.com/checklists.json" -Method Get -ContentType "application/json" -WebSession $test
PS C:\Windows\system32> $wr3
StatusCode : 200 StatusDescription : OK Content : [{"id":596936,"name":"test","options":2,"public":false,"updated_at":"2017/01/26 19:40:41 +0000","markdown?":true,"archived":false,"read_only":false,"user_count":1,"user_updated_at":"2017/01/26 19:40:4... RawContent : HTTP/1.1 200 OK Transfer-Encoding: chunked Connection: keep-alive Status: 200 OK X-UA-Compatible: IE=Edge,chrome=1 X-Request-Id: 5d1e666a451d2f240e67d7afd3b9ebc7 X-Runtime: 0.023038 X-Rack-Cach... Forms : {} Headers : {[Transfer-Encoding, chunked], [Connection, keep-alive], [Status, 200 OK], [X-UA-Compatible, IE=Edge,chrome=1]...} Images : {} InputFields : {} Links : {} ParsedHtml : mshtml.HTMLDocumentClass RawContentLength : 296
I don't see any special info for post params and I believe you can just use a saved web session after authenticating. Let me know if you can replicate what I saw.
> ... you could use an app such as Pocket. Install the browser extension to save web pages which can then be accessed on any device.
I do the same with my web-based research & organizer tool Checkvist. For any web page I can save its link and title, tags and notes with just a few keystrokes.
I read a great biography of William Lloyd Garrison (the American abolitionist) a couple of years ago and it made it clear how he, and other radicals, dramatically changed the course of history through their constant focus and activism on how slavery was wrong. Their radicalism shifted the middle. That's what "extreme" views do, they make it easier for people in the middle to move towards embracing justice.
We (most of us) don't remember all the people who said "Yeah, slavery is wrong but we have to be practical," or "I would like to end slavery but we have to compensate owners," or "But what will we do with all the black people?" These were real positions within the anti-slavery movement. When Garrison began his career, they were the dominant positions and he spent much of his career being vilified by gradualists who thought he was too extreme.
They wanted to end slavery "someday." And they didn't want those who claimed to own other humans to be too uncomfortable. We don't remember gradualists today. We remember the men and women with the courage and ethical wisdom to look at slavery and say "This is wrong. It needs to stop." And their "extremism" is part of why it did stop, because the moral pressure they exerted made the South conclude it was inevitable that slavery would end unless they broke free of the Union.
I think we have to be careful in drawing parallels between veganism and past social justice movements, but there is a valuable lesson for us here. We can serve animals by not being in the middle because by being extreme, we can change what the middle even is. Today it is becoming mainstream to critique things like gestation crates or foie gras. We did that. We changed the middle. (This "we," obviously, is broad).
Cannot find module '@andelf/rsapi-linux-arm64-gnu'
Looks like this flatpak won't run on an ARM cpu.
I'm trying out Logseq myself but my main outliner is Checkvist and is a web app so will run on your Chromebook for sure. Its number one best feature is great keyboard support so it's fast to take and organize notes. https://checkvist.com/
If you want to mix notes and tasks, you can have a look to Checkvist.
I use it primarily for coding specs.
I write in Markdown.
The main advantage of that tool is that it is fully keyboard-driven.
Phil
" I don't know of any outliner's ability to export to .md files".
Checkvist can. [Checkvist Beta also recently introduced backlinks.]
[Mindmup mind map also exports to .md]
PS: I really love Transno but was hugely disappointed with their recently introduced cloud based Innos.io(backlinks, block-level, sliding panes) as there don't appear to be any existing plans of interoperability(.md / opml / .mm freemind)
https://checkvist.com/ works on the web and as a progressive web app. Checked off items either disappear or are shown ~~striked through~~, whichever you prefer. You can share lists, add due dates, tags, and attachments, or keep it simple.
The UI is minimal and it's keyboard focused. So I tend to do my list creation on a computer where it's very quick to create hierarchical lists typing and using enter and tab, then use my mobile to check things off, look up info, and add some notes.
Checkvist - keyboard-focused, markdown + code support, rich free plan. Has an unique approach for separating edit/navigation modes.
I'm the developer, ping me if you have questions
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
Checkvist is pretty good, and simple enough, I will give it a try.
It's also cool that they are bootstrapped small company, always good to support these smaller projects.
I have a hidden DM-only section on the table to store minis and stuff that I don't want the PCs to see yet, and I use CheckVist for all my notes. I run a pretty rules-flexible game, so I don't have full character sheets for NPCs or anything like that.
Try Checkvist - our online outliner and task manager. Especially great for splitting complex tasks into chunks, prioritizing them, and focus.
Has a Dark Mode and Zen Mode. Keyboard-focused. I'm using it both for professional tasks and for daily stuff.
Best,
Checkvist - professional list-making tool and task manager. Especially great for splitting complex tasks into solvable chunks, prioritizing, and focus.
Has a Dark Mode and Zen Mode. Keyboard-focused.
I was originally typed as ENTP but after a few more tests / more reading about the types I fit more accurately into INTP
Anyway, a lot of our issues are the same - here's some tips on managing the T/F clash / *NTP immaturity.
> I mean it literally was a vegan diet. The parents were vegan. That was the point of the diet.
This sentence is meaningless, what about all the parents feeding their children omnivore diets who kill them?
>Now you’re into a “no true Scotsman” thing. I mean clearly if you have to do some sort of detailed plan to avoid dying of malnutrition or having serious health of developmental problem then that’s not healthier for the child when compared to an alternative diet, right?
You don't need a plan, the disclaimer is for idiots like OP who try and eat fruitatarian. and I am a true Scotsman.
>Like to stretch back to the potato example, if you had a theoretical diet wherein you fed your child only potatoes and supplements, obviously that’s more unhealthy than a parent who can get the same result by throwing a dart at the food pyramid and adding a multivitamin or some shit and being more or less good to go?
No idea what this means, potatoes are one of the nutritious foods on the planet so probably not (but again, don't know what you mean)
>Like one of these two things is a lot narrower of a tightrope to walk when it comes to your kid and their development/not death
The tightrope is feeding your child a diet which we know is killing people by the millions. Look at the top killers, all reduced by eatin a vegan diet. Your risk of cancer drops 15% and CVD by 25% (and that's a conservative estimate, I'm just going off that because that's the current 'established' number established by the largest systematic review to date)
Here is all my research, the evidence is overwhelming at this point.
I'm actually speaker to her on her facebook group just now. I believe it's 100% legit. She may not have exact mechanism done and someone this has went unnoticed for years (Barely mentioned at all in MCAS / EDS / POTS / ADHD groups).
I spent a few days inventing this theory in a hyper focused research hole before discovering it.
Some of the science I found is here should an undeniable connection.
Checkvist, and Checkvist bookmarklet extensions for Firefox/Chrome.
Universal online ouliner with great keyboard support, helps to organize notes, tasks, links, everything related to work.
Man, try a Pomodairo technique. It really helps to focus, the main part is usually to start.
​
Also, take a look at this outline-summary from "Learning about learning" course regarding the procrastination part: https://checkvist.com/checklists/630571#task_28336900
​
Hope this helps,
I've also used canvas every day for about 5 years. My life is based around tasks to the point my wife makes fun of me about it. I was a little hurt by the Tasks changes, but I just yesterday found checkvist.com and have already completely converted over. It's amazing if you're of the technical slant; keyboard shortcuts for everything, clean interface, and a very interoperable api. I have no connection to the developers, but they are very responsive to dev requests. Let me know if you want to know anything about my experience and check it out.
Well, I'm using Checkvist for all of such tasks (and I'm a developer of it). You can use it as for notes, ideas, recurring/usual tasks, gift/vacation planning etc. We've recently added a distraction-free mode.
As for good productivity, aside from task management/notes - take a look for some focus-boosting apps like Forest
Best,
I use Checkvist - online outliner and task manager with focus on work from the keyboard. I use it for all kind of work and home planning, and use e-mail notifications for (one email with due tasks per day). Mobile version is available as well.
I'm also one of the developers, so ping me if you have questions.
Checkvist was created as a tool for keyboard-fans, with Vi-like keyboard shortcuts and explicit editing mode. Code fragments could be added via Markdown. Take a look (I'm one of the co-founders)
> 2) Во-первых, почему HTTP…
Це тимчасово, бо зараз це практично ні на що не впливає для нас. Пізніше це буде важливо, коли потрібне буде індексування контенту.
> 3) ОСОБЕННО если вы раздаете exe файлы…
Спробуйте хоч навести на лінк для скачування. Інсталятор роздається з GitHub по https
> 4) Большими буквами написано GitHub, но исходного кода нет.
Ісходнік є і доступний при інсталяції, але репо ще не опубліковане на GitHub, зараз на сайті при кліку є можливість підписатися на повідомлення.
> 5) Нет какого-либо описания архитектуры системы
Є, якщо прочитати глибше. Тут є коротко: https://checkvist.com/checklists/621826/tasks/30709872
> 6) Кто разработчики проекта? Сколько их? Почему им можно доверять?
Приєднуйтеся до нашої робочої групи, тоді познайомимося. Це відкрита інформація.
> Установка "exe" файла на свой компьютер это достаточно серьёзный шаг.
Правильно. Це буде опція для ентузіастів, які знають що вони роблять, вміють ізолювати середовище і тд. А прості користувачів будуть юзати легкий клієнт (робота з браузера), коли він буде реалізований.
> Ну и наконец: "основу взято ідеї блокчейна криптовалюти Bitcoin."
Конкретніше: взято за основу ідею повної децентралізації і використання криптографії для гарантії незмінності даних.
> Тут возникает вопрос: не собираются ли авторы power-of-trust разработать систему силами волонтеров, а потом запустить своё ICO и получить миллионы?
Ні не збираються, проект робиться зовсім з іншою метою, і у нашій групі навіть була перепалка, бо частина спільноти хоче щоб була внутрішня кориптовалюта (чи токен), а я проти, бо зараз вона не потрібна і навіть шкідлива буде.
If you like the outliner way of defining entries in WF, want to add dates and do all with the keyboard, you could have a look to Checkvist.
That's where all my coding projects start !
Tags are for grouping notes into categories, the same as folders except a note can have more than one tag.
To be honest I'm not using either right now. I edit notes with Vim in a Linux shell in Crouton or in a remote Linux VPS (DigitalOcean). You might dig Vim which is the ultimate in clean design but has definitely a steep learning curve.
I also use an outliner called Checkvist but that's not mainly for notetaking, more like information organizing.
I've been looking for the same thing. Best I could come up with is a system using todo sites like Checkvist/moodoo. Here's my protoype.
When in-store just click on each ingredient and it'll pull up all recipes that use it. So if you click "onions" and one recipe you're making needs 2 and another 3, just add 'em together.
Can't wait til we find something more like what you're talking about, though.